Manchester City top the table with the most senior international call-ups of any Premier League side ahead of November’s international window.
Manchester City Lead Premier League With 18 International Call-Ups
November’s internationals are upon us, and with several crucial World Cup qualifying fixtures set to be played, countless Premier League stars have been called up by their respective nations.
Leading as the club with the most senior international call-ups this month is Manchester City.
A whopping 18 members of Pep Guardiola’s squad have been called up to play for their countries over the next or so, which comes off the back of an impressive month for the Cityzens.
Since the last international window, they have recorded six wins and just one defeat. This includes a comfortable 3-0 win over reigning Premier League champions Liverpool on Sunday.
Erling Haaland, who is six goals clear at the top of the division’s goalscoring charts after netting the opener against the Reds, is among the called-up players, receiving the call from Norway.
Oscar Bobb has been called up to the Norwegian squad alongside him, while the likes of John Stones, Nico O’Reilly, Phil Foden, Gianluigi Donnarumma, Ruben Dias, Rayan Cherki, Jeremy Doku and more have received call-ups from their respective nations, too.

City’s local rivals Manchester United follow with the second-most international call-ups with 16.
The Red Devils’ internationals include Bruno Fernandes, Diogo Dalot, Matthijs de Ligt, Casemiro, Matheus Cunha, Patrick Dorgu, Bryan Mbeumo, Senne Lammens and Amad Diallo.
Elsewhere, Liverpool (15), Tottenham (13), Arsenal (12), Brentford (12), Wolves (11), Sunderland (11) and Chelsea (11) are among the sides with the most call-ups in the division.
Arne Slot’s Reds stars head into the international window having recorded four losses and three wins since October’s internationals, as they now sit in eighth place in the league table.
This poor spell has seen Slot become more favoured in the Premier League sack race market.
Former boss Jurgen Klopp is the bookmakers’ favourite to make a sensational return to replace the Dutchman at Anfield, according to the next Liverpool manager betting odds market.
Star players Mohamed Salah, Hugo Ekitike, Ibrahima Konate, Dominik Szoboszlai, Alexis Mac Allister, Cody Gakpo, Ryan Gravenberch and Virgil van Dijk are all among their call-ups.

Following with 10 international call-ups apiece are Crystal Palace and Aston Villa.
Chelsea’s Enzo Fernandez withdrawing from the Argentina squad has benefitted Villa’s position in the table, with Emiliano Buendia being called up to Lionel Scaloni’s squad in his place for their friendly match against Angola.

Everton, Fulham and Leeds, meanwhile, have all seen nine players be called up to their respective national teams, while eight of Brighton, West Ham and Burnley’s players have.
Sitting at the bottom of our table with the fewest international call-ups are Nottingham Forest and Newcastle.
The Tricky Trees and the Magpies have only seen seven members of their respective squads be called up to play for their senior international teams this month.
Like many, their positions in the table would be much higher if it wasn’t for injuries.
Forest’s Chris Wood (New Zealand), Ola Aina (Nigeria), Oleksandr Zinchenko (Ukraine), Angus Gunn (Scotland) and Douglas Luiz (Brazil) have all missed out on call-ups due to injuries.
Meanwhile, Newcastle duo Anthony Gordon and Nick Pope have both withdrawn from England duty due to their respective injury concerns.
Premier League International Call-Ups Table
Manchester City — 18 call-upsRayan Ait-Nouri (Algeria), Jeremy Doku (Belgium), Josko Gvardiol (Croatia), Omar Marmoush (Egypt), James Trafford (England), John Stones (England), Nico O’Reilly (England), Phil Foden (England), Rayan Cherki (France), Gianluigi Donnaruma (Italy), Nathan Ake (Netherlands), Tijjani Reijnders (Netherlands), Oscar Bobb (Norway), Erling Haaland (Norway), Matheus Nunes (Portugal), Ruben Dias (Portugal), Bernardo Silva (Portugal), Abdukodir Khusanov (Uzbekistan) |
Manchester United — 16 call-upsAltay Bayindir (Turkey), Diogo Dalot (Portugal), Bruno Fernandes (Portugal), Noussair Mazraoui (Morocco), Matthijs de Ligt (Netherlands), Casemiro (Brazil), Matheus Cunha (Brazil), Patrick Dorgu (Denmark), Amad Diallo (Ivory Coast), Bryan Mbeumo (Cameroon), Senne Lammens (Belgium), Manuel Ugarte (Uruguay), Diego Leon (Paraguay), James Scanlon (Gibraltar), James Overy (Australia), Sekou Kone (Mali) |
Liverpool — 15 call-upsAlexis Mac Allister (Argentina), Mohamed Salah (Egypt), Hugo Ekitike (France), Ibrahima Konate (France), Giorgi Mamardashvili (Georgia), Florian Wirtz (Germany), Milos Kerkez (Hungary), Dominik Szoboszlai (Hungary), Wataru Endo (Japan), Cody Gakpo (Netherlands), Ryan Gravenberch (Netherlands), Virgil van Dijk (Netherlands), Conor Bradley (Northern Ireland), Andy Robertson (Scotland), Alexander Isak (Sweden) |
Tottenham — 13 call-upsGuglielmo Vicario (Italy), Kevin Danso (Austria), Joao Palhinha (Portugal), Micky van de Ven (Netherlands), Xavi Simons (Netherlands), Richarlison (Brazil), Lucas Bergvall (Sweden), Cristian Romero (Argentina), Djed Spence (England), Brennan Johnson (Wales), Pedro Porro (Spain), Pape Matar Sarr (Senegal), Rodrigo Bentancur (Uruguay) |
Arsenal — 12 call-upsLeandro Trossard (Belgium), Gabriel (Brazil), Christian Norgaard (Denmark), Piero Hincapie (Ecuador), Bukayo Saka (England), Declan Rice (England), Eberechi Eze (England), William Saliba (France), Riccardo Calafiori (Italy), David Raya (Spain), Mikel Merino (Spain), Martin Zubimendi (Spain) |
Brentford — 12 call-upsCaoimhin Kelleher (Ireland), Nathan Collins (Ireland), Aaron Hickey (Scotland), Kevin Schade (Germany), Ethan Pinnock (Jamaica), Mikkel Damsgaard (Denmark), Hakon Valdimarsson (Iceland), Frank Onyeka (Nigeria), Yehor Yarmolyuk (Ukraine), Kristoffer Ajer (Norway), Dango Ouattara (Burkina Faso), Jordan Henderson (England) |
Wolves — 11 call-upsJose Sa (Portugal), Santiago Bueno (Uruguay), Tawanda Chirewa (Zimbabwe), David Moller Wolfe (Norway), Jorgen Strand Larsen (Norway), Jhon Arias (Colombia), Hwang Hee-chan (South Korea), Emmanuel Agbadou (Ivory Coast), Tolu Arokodare (Nigeria), Jean-Ricner Bellegarde (Haiti), Jackson Tchatchoua (Cameroon) |
Sunderland — 11 call-upsDaniel Ballard (Northern Ireland), Trai Hume (Northern Ireland), Lutsharel Geertruida (Netherlands), Robin Roefs (Netherlands), Chemsdine Talbi (Morocco), Omar Alderete (Paraguay), Reinildo Mandava (Mozambique), Arthur Masuaku (DR Congo), Noah Sadiki (DR Congo), Granit Xhaka (Switzerland), Bertrand Traore (Burkina Faso) |
Chelsea — 11 call-upsMarc Cucurella (Spain), Reece James (England), Trevoh Chalobah (England), Pedro Neto (Portugal), Filip Jorgensen (Denmark), Andrey Santos (Brazil), Estevao (Brazil), Joao Pedro (Brazil), Moises Caicedo (Ecuador), Malo Gusto (France), Dujuan Richards (Jamaica) |
Aston Villa — 10 call-upsMatty Cash (Poland), Victor Lindelof (Sweden), Ezri Konsa (England), Morgan Rogers (England), John McGinn (Scotland), Youri Tielemans (Belgium), Lucas Digne (France), Donyell Malen (Netherlands), Evann Guessand (Ivory Coast), Emiliano Buendia (Argentina) |
Crystal Palace — 10 call-upsDaniel Munoz (Colombia), Jefferson Lerma (Colombia), Dean Henderson (England), Adam Wharton (England), Ismaila Sarr (Senegal), Yeremy Pino (Spain), Jean-Philippe Mateta (France), Daichi Kamada (Japan), Justin Devenny (Northern Ireland), Walter Benitez (Argentina) |
Bournemouth — 9 call-upsDorde Petrovic (Serbia), Veljko Milosavljevic (Serbia), Marcos Senesi (Argentina), David Brooks (Wales), Alex Scott (England), Ryan Christie (Scotland), Ben Gannon-Doak (Scotland), Tyler Adams (USA), Antoine Semenyo (Ghana) |
Everton — 9 call-upsJordan Pickford (England), Beto (Guinea Bissau), Jake O’Brien (Ireland), Seamus Coleman (Ireland), Mark Travers (Ireland), Idrissa Gueye (Senegal), Iliman Ndiaye (Senegal), Vitaliy Mykolenko (Ukraine), Tom King (Wales) |
Fulham — 9 call-upsCalvin Bassey (Nigeria), Alex Iwobi (Nigeria), Samuel Chukwueze (Nigeria), Joachim Andersen (Denmark), Raul Jimenez (Mexico), Harry Wilson (Wales), Sander Berge (Norway), Sasa Lukic (Serbia), Timothy Castagne (Belgium) |
Leeds — 9 call-upsKarl Darlow (Wales), Joe Rodon (Wales), Daniel James (Wales), Ethan Ampadu (Wales), Brenden Aaronson (USA), Jaka Bijol (Slovenia), Ilia Gruev (Bulgaria), Ao Tanaka (Japan), Gabriel Gudmundsson (Sweden) |
Brighton — 8 call-upsBart Verbruggen (Netherlands), Jan Paul van Hecke (Netherlands), Charlampos Kostoulas (Greece), Carlos Baleba (Cameroon), Ferdi Kadioglu (Turkey), Diego Gomez (Paraguay), Yasin Ayari (Sweden), Maxim De Cuyper (Belgium) |
West Ham — 8 call-upsMads Hermansen (Denmark), Lucas Paqueta (Brazil), El Hadji Malick Diouf (Senegal), Aaron Wan-Bissaka (DR Congo), Tomas Soucek (Czech Republic), Andy Irving (Scotland), Callum Marshall (Northern Ireland), Jarrod Bowen (England) |
Burnley — 8 call-upsMartin Dubravka (Slovakia), Quilindschy Hartman (Netherlands), Axel Tuanzebe (DR Congo), Lyle Foster (South Africa), Josh Cullen (Ireland), Armando Broja (Albania), Hannibal Mejbri (Tunisia), Hannes Delcroix (Haiti) |
Newcastle — 7 call-upsDan Burn (England), Bruno Guimaraes (Brazil), Sandro Tonali (Italy), Anthony Elanga (Sweden), Nick Woltemade (Germany), Malick Thiaw (Germany), Mohamed Waddani (Libya) |
Nottingham Forest — 7 call-upsNeco Williams (Wales), John Victor (Brazil), Ibrahim Sangare (Ivory Coast), Elliot Anderson (England), Dan Ndoye (Switzerland), Matz Sels (Belgium), Nikola Milenkovic (Serbia) |
Note: Figures include only senior international call-ups for November’s fixtures.